ABSTRACT
As urban public spaces adjacent to schools, school squares are fundamental for encouraging children’s independent mobility, engagement with the environment and incidental learning. Aiming to spatially define the concept of the school square, this study presents a photovoice process involving 128 students and three secondary schools in Lombardy, Italy. In order to address their affective perception of their school squares in terms of likeability and environmental features, students were asked to produce three photographs with captions, representing their school square and elements they like/dislike. This research proposes a child-centred perspective as a potential instrument for educators and policy makers.
Acknowledgments
The paper is based on research and workshop activities conducted by the VENTO research group, supervised by Prof. Paolo Pileri.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).